What kind of cedar are you looking for? For Spanish cedar I bought a plank from the specialty lumber shop and then just use a chop saw to cut off pieces to "dry chunk" my beer. You need very little contact time, so I don't know if I would go with chips. I find three days to be about right, then you need to remove the chunks or it gets overpowering.

The "cedar" they use for the humidor series of beers at Cigar City is actually Spanish Mahogany, not cedar. It's the same wood they put in boxes of cigars, which a friendly cigar shop proprietor would surely give you if you bought a cigar or two.

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Jeff Gladish, Tampa (989.3, 175.1 Apparent Rennarian)Homebrewing since 1990AHA member since 1991, now a lifetime member BJCP judge since 1995

not real peticular on what kind of cedar, just looking for that cedar flavor. had a red ale aged on a cedar spiral (cask) from a local colorado brewery where i live and it was fantastic and they were kind enough to share there recipe and they said they got their cedar from cigar city brewing. so as jeffy posted maybe it is actually a spanish mahogany. maybe i will have to go sniffing around. thanx guys!

The "cedar" they use for the humidor series of beers at Cigar City is actually Spanish Mahogany, not cedar. It's the same wood they put in boxes of cigars, which a friendly cigar shop proprietor would surely give you if you bought a cigar or two.

That's what I was thinking as I read the OP. The cigar shops I go to always have a bunch of empty boxes. You can buy them inexpensively or as Jeff said they will probably give you a couple if you buy some stogies. Look for one that has a character you find appealing and use the interior wood. I see a maduro brown in my future.

The "cedar" they use for the humidor series of beers at Cigar City is actually Spanish Mahogany, not cedar. It's the same wood they put in boxes of cigars, which a friendly cigar shop proprietor would surely give you if you bought a cigar or two.

I had the fortune of trying one of Jeff's cedar IPAs. The wood was pretty assertive, but not overwhelming. It was nicely balanced and a good beer. IIRC he aged it for 3 days on the wood, but maybe he can say more about how he did that. Any more cedar character, and it would've been objectionable, though, so use a light touch.

I had the fortune of trying one of Jeff's cedar IPAs. The wood was pretty assertive, but not overwhelming. It was nicely balanced and a good beer. IIRC he aged it for 3 days on the wood, but maybe he can say more about how he did that. Any more cedar character, and it would've been objectionable, though, so use a light touch.

I split that batch and added a 5" spiral to one half (5 gallons) for 3 days. The other half tasted like an average American Pale Ale. The half with wood took on a huge grapfruit character and was very perfumey in the nose. The wood came through like cedar would taste if that means anything. It has had very good comments at competitions and scored in the high 30's most of the time.I'm going to add the same spiral to another keg of IPA this weekend and see what happens.

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Jeff Gladish, Tampa (989.3, 175.1 Apparent Rennarian)Homebrewing since 1990AHA member since 1991, now a lifetime member BJCP judge since 1995

The "cedar" they use for the humidor series of beers at Cigar City is actually Spanish Mahogany, not cedar. It's the same wood they put in boxes of cigars, which a friendly cigar shop proprietor would surely give you if you bought a cigar or two.

The "cedar" they use for the humidor series of beers at Cigar City is actually Spanish Mahogany, not cedar. It's the same wood they put in boxes of cigars, which a friendly cigar shop proprietor would surely give you if you bought a cigar or two.